Good afternoon, everyone.
I apologize, we have been trying to log in for an hour.
My name is Réjean Porlier and I am the Mayor of Sept-Îles. I am also responsible for the transportation committee for the assembly of North Shore RCMs.
Ladies and gentlemen, I would like to begin by thanking you for allowing me this brief statement, in which I will advocate for sustained funding to improve road and air transportation service and infrastructure in rural regions.
We must admit that we have failed in our responsibility to make dynamic use of Canada's vast territory. The concentration of populations in the major cities and the staggering investments required to constantly expand their transportation networks, at the expense of so-called remote regions such as Quebec’s North Shore, have in my view only accelerated the exodus from these regions to the major cities.
In recent years, we have witnessed a number of brazen contradictions. The first is undoubtedly the increase in the number of ever-widening highways, which spur the continued growth in the number of cars and are responsible for much of the climate change that we claim to want to combat.
Another paradox is that, while we spent tens of billions of dollars overbuilding these urban road networks, the sole road connection between Quebec and Newfoundland and Labrador was never completed. Yet we wonder why people are leaving the area! I hope that, one day, I will see the completion of this critical economic corridor that will open up many communities. Imagine for a moment all the children who, for many years, have been isolated and missed many long-planned trips or who have witnessed the impacts of this isolation on their loved ones’ health. How many of them, after leaving home to complete their studies, will want to return to that isolation?
While we wait for the day when our governments will finally decide to finish Highway 138, putting an overdue end to this isolation and transforming these communities from a resilient existence to a dynamic one, our only hope is airline service worthy of the name, at an affordable cost, above all.
What exactly is the situation?
In general, air transport in Quebec is everything but efficient and accessible. It is more of a brake on development than a useful tool for outlying regions. The service does not seek to serve as many people as possible but instead to deliver the most profit for the airlines. In fact, it embodies another paradox: generous subsidies generate profits for private businesses, with little concern shown for genuine accessibility.
The situation is even worse on the Lower North Shore, where service is very poorly structured in my view. Needs should be met together to create economies of scale through the use of larger aircraft, which would lower ticket prices. Service today is so poor that tourism development in this otherwise outstanding region is impossible to envision.
The report for a study on air transportation commissioned by the assembly of North Shore RCMs entitled “Repenser la desserte aérienne de Sept-Îles et sa région,” clearly showed a need to abandon the old paradigms and find innovative solutions, such as a cooperative model in which customers become owners with an interest in the quality, reliability and accessibility of the service. This report is appended as part of a brief on the future of air transportation in the region, submitted by the City of Sept-Îles to the aviation committee struck by Quebec’s Transport Minister, François Bonnardel, in the wake of the pandemic.
In fact, an initiative employing the co-operative model—the Coopérative de transport régional du Québec, or Coop Treq—is underway in Quebec and should come into being this summer.
In short, there is no doubt in my mind that fulfilling our governments’ stated desire to make dynamic use of our region first requires completing Highway 138 to finally link Quebec with Newfoundland and Labrador. The idea of further delaying this work, which is stymying our development, is counterproductive and reveals a lack of vision. If they can't rely on the road, one village after another will disappear.
At the same time, the Canadian government should take a serious interest in the study on air transportation commissioned by the assembly of North Shore RCMs and the report produced by the Institut de recherche en économie contemporaine, which proposes innovative and promising avenues.
I have been tasked with advocating on this issue by the assembly of North Shore RCMs. I am also a member of the air transport committee of the Union of Quebec Municipalities.
I would be pleased to discuss this matter with you further.
I hope I didn't speak too quickly, Mr. Chair.